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Friday, 10 January 2014

Free Leonard Peltier: An Open Letter to President Obama

Dear President Obama

From the time you burst on the US political scene,
overturning Hillary Clinton’s hopes for the White House, until the time you
stood on a platform, under the driving South African rain to bid farewell to a
world icon, you have captured my heart.

How often I pray to the good Lord above that here, in
South Africa, we can find a home-grown Obama to step into those vast empty
shoes of Nelson Mandela so that his (and our) dream of peace and racial equality
can become a reality in this beautiful complex land.

Remembering the brutal battles for regime changes in countries such as
Syria, Egypt and Zimbabwe, the humble Mandela would be the first to remind us
that his dream was not begun alone. He would remind us that another man walked
that same long road with him to bring a new democratic order to this beloved country. Without
him, Mandela could not have risen above his violent past as Commander
in Chief ofUmkhonto
we Sizweto become a peace making legend and an inspiration
to all people: he would, like the Native American freedom activist Leonard
Peltier, have remained a political prisoner.

Former President FW de Klerk, the
last President of apartheid South Africa and, together with Mandela, the 1993
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, turned his back on his personal and political
history to make the historical decision to free Mandela.

While it takes a great soul like
Mandela’s to rise above violent hatred and forgive, it also takes an extraordinary
person to find the courage to stand alone against the clamouring voices of his
personal and political history, and take the momentous step that de Klerk did. Thus,
de Klerk paved the way for Nelson Mandela to reach his fullest potential as both
a man and as a leader. Mandela, free at last, became a wise elder to the world.

As you come to the end of your Presidency,
there are a few spreading stains on my image of Obama as a young Mandela: Guantanamo
Bay. Drone attacks. And Leonard Peltier, whom Mandela said should be free.

If you were ever inspired by
Mandela, do you have the vision to also be inspired by his former enemy? Can you
find the political and personal courage to, like de Klerk, pardon a man jailed
for justified violent acts against a then-ruling government?

By freeing the political prisoner
Nelson Mandela, President de Klerk gave the world a hero. Can you FREE LEONARD
PELTIER?

Sincerely

Judy Croome

Author, Johannesburg, South
Africa

Twitter: @judy_croome

* * * *Find out more about Leonard Peltier HERE and on WIKIPEDIA* * * *

HILARY - this slipped through the cracks, so only answering today! A month late :(!! Haven't heard anything, but the article did get quiet a lot of tweets. I do hope that before he leaves office Obama finds it in him to grant Peltier an official pardon - reading the full story of the anomalies in the trial are frightening (although perhaps not so surprising after the Edward Snowden leaks!)

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